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Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts .
searching for Insular Celts 11 found (185 total)
alternate case: insular Celts
Celtic calendar
(1,381 words)
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reasons, it points to a considerable degree of sophistication. Among the Insular Celts , the year was divided into a light half and a dark half. As the day
Classical reenactment
(804 words)
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at the International Ancient Greek Hoplite Festival Continental and insular Celts and Gauls are the subjects of some reenacting groups, with a focus on
Tailteann Games (ancient)
(1,583 words)
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case, Irish). The texts as a whole deal with copious detail for the Insular Celts . From the late nineteenth century, the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA)
Celtic Animism
(1,813 words)
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five Irish provinces then in existence. Among both the Continental and Insular Celts , the behaviour of certain animals and birds were observed for omens
Champlevé
(1,450 words)
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(as used on the Witham Shield), and the base was usually bronze. The "Insular Celts " of the British Isles made especially common use of the technique, seen
The Morrígan
(3,390 words)
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name was Anand." Mac Cana, Prionsias (1970). "The Goddesses of the Insular Celts ". Celtic Mythology. Hamlyn. MacKillop 1998, pp. 335–336. The Metrical
British Latin
(2,600 words)
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Charles-Edwards, Thomas (1995). "Language and Society among the Insular Celts , AD 400–1000". In Green, Miranda J. (ed.). The Celtic World. Routledge
High cross
(2,539 words)
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across the world, often in contexts without any specific link to the Insular Celts or Britain. Anglo-Saxon crosses were typically more slender, and often
Fidchell
(2,028 words)
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counters, however, conical pieces may also have been innovated among the Insular Celts , as stone cones for gaming have been found in sites at Shetland, Scotland
Ancient Celtic religion
(7,857 words)
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every quality admired and desired by the Celtic peoples themselves." Insular Celts swore their oaths by their tribal gods, and the land, sea and sky; as
Celts (modern)
(6,557 words)
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Britain has always been home to multiple identities. Recently, the Insular Celts have increasingly been seen as part of an Atlantic trading-networked